Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026--San Antonio
Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico is a short novel that was shortlisted for the Booker International Price (for books translated into English). It's different. Approximately the first 10% of the book is describing an apartment in detail--the number of rooms, the walls, the doors, the floors, the furniture, the decor, the plants, the choice of kitchenware (plates, knives, etc.), the choice of bedspreads and upholstery (color, fabric, and design), the plants, the views from the windows of each room, etc. But that detail tells a lot about the protagonists who are then introduced. They are a young couple from Italy who are IT designers (of web pages in detail--font, colors, photos, layouts, etc.) and have moved into this apartment in the former eastern part of Berlin because it is the trendy, inexpensive, and most exciting spot in Europe where they can live a cosmopolitan life while working by contract remotely. The novel starts in the 90s and moves forward to the present. At first, they are living quite well on what they make because they are very good at their jobs and are always on top of the constant changes in IT trends in design and because they arrived in Berlin when it was cheap to get rent their rent controlled apartment. They were living the kind of exciting life they imagined as being like it would be in New York City, but even more exciting and cheaper. They made friends among expats who came from all parts of the world for the same reason they came. They were exploring the city on a daily basis while only having to work a few hours to afford it all. And as time passed, they started noticing things: All the newcomers like them were causing the neighborhood to change. Quaint, inexpensive shops, bars, restaurants were disappearing. Buildings were being remodeled/enlarged in the same way to create the "new look" they had created for themselves. These changes made prices go up. The small galleries they had found exciting with opening parties with free drinks and snacks were being replaced in the same way--becoming more professional, more expensive, and more sterile in appearances. The couple began to notice that their budget was getting tighter over time. The increased competition of IT designers meant that they couldn't raise the rates for their work, so the increase in the costs of everything except for their rent meant that they had to work more hours for more clients which gave them less time to enjoy the city and their friends. They were becoming disillusioned with how their lives in Berlin had changed, and they started wondering if there were places where they could rediscover life as it had been--inexpensive in an exciting place attracting young international expats. Since they could keep their apartment in Berlin and even make money off it by subletting it for more than their rent, they tried Lisbon and discovered drawbacks there. They tried Sicily, but it was worse. They returned to Berlin only to find that it had continued to gentrify and to get more expensive and that most of their international friends' lives had changed; they had started families which changed their lifestyle or had returned to their homes. The atmosphere they missed from the early days of the wall coming down in Berlin and it becoming an inexpensive magnet city for creatives from around the world just didn't exist anymore. The novel continues as they return home after inheriting a farm from an uncle. There, they work to create their own version of a good life among international expats by using the buildings on the farm to recreate a co-working space and several apartments that could be rented. Of course, when one has just happened to find themselves in a unique time and situation, its natural to hope to create the excitement of that experience over and over again, but it is not typically possible. There comes a time to have to realize and accept how fortunate they were to have had that experience in the first place. I gave the book 4 stars out of 5.